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Steve Jobs

Steven Paul Jobs (February 24, 1955 – October 5, 2011) was an American businessman, inventor, and investor best known for co-founding the technology giant Apple Inc. Jobs was also the founder of NeXT and chairman and majority shareholder of Pixar. He was a pioneer of the personal computer revolution of the 1970s and 1980s, along with his early business partner and fellow Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak.

For other uses, see Steve Jobs (disambiguation).

Steve Jobs

Steven Paul Jobs[1]

(1955-02-24)February 24, 1955
San Francisco, California, US

October 5, 2011(2011-10-05) (aged 56)

Reed College (attended)

1971–2011

(m. 1991)

Chrisann Brennan (1972–1977)

4, including Lisa, Reed, and Eve

Jobs was born in San Francisco in 1955 and adopted shortly afterwards. He attended Reed College in 1972 before withdrawing that same year. In 1974, he traveled through India, seeking enlightenment before later studying Zen Buddhism. He and Wozniak co-founded Apple in 1976 to further develop and sell Wozniak's Apple I personal computer. Together, the duo gained fame and wealth a year later with production and sale of the Apple II, one of the first highly successful mass-produced microcomputers. Jobs saw the commercial potential of the Xerox Alto in 1979, which was mouse-driven and had a graphical user interface (GUI). This led to the development of the unsuccessful Apple Lisa in 1983, followed by the breakthrough Macintosh in 1984, the first mass-produced computer with a GUI. The Macintosh launched the desktop publishing industry in 1985 with the addition of the Apple LaserWriter, the first laser printer to feature vector graphics and PostScript.


In 1985, Jobs departed Apple after a long power struggle with the company's board and its then-CEO, John Sculley. That same year, Jobs took some Apple employees with him to found NeXT, a computer platform development company that specialized in computers for higher-education and business markets, serving as its CEO. In 1986, he helped develop the visual effects industry by funding the computer graphics division of Lucasfilm that eventually spun off independently as Pixar, which produced the first 3D computer-animated feature film Toy Story (1995) and became a leading animation studio, producing over 27 films since.


In 1997, Jobs returned to Apple as CEO after the company's acquisition of NeXT. He was largely responsible for reviving Apple, which was on the verge of bankruptcy. He worked closely with British designer Jony Ive to develop a line of products and services that had larger cultural ramifications, beginning with the "Think different" advertising campaign, and leading to the iMac, iTunes, Mac OS X, Apple Store, iPod, iTunes Store, iPhone, App Store, and iPad. In 2003, Jobs was diagnosed with a pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor. He died of respiratory arrest related to the tumor in 2011, and in 2022, was posthumously awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

Early life

Family

Steven Paul Jobs was born in San Francisco, California, on February 24, 1955, to Joanne Carole Schieble and Abdulfattah "John" Jandali (Arabic: عبد الفتاح الجندلي). Abdulfattah Jandali was born in a Muslim household to wealthy Syrian parents, the youngest of nine siblings. After obtaining his undergraduate degree at the American University of Beirut, Jandali pursued a PhD in political science at the University of Wisconsin. There, he met Joanne Schieble, an American Catholic of Swiss-German descent whose parents owned a mink farm and real estate in Green Bay. The two fell in love but faced opposition from Schieble's father due to Jandali's Muslim faith. When Schieble became pregnant, she arranged for a closed adoption, and travelled to San Francisco to give birth.[3]


Schieble requested that her son be adopted by college graduates. A lawyer and his wife were selected, but they withdrew after discovering that the baby was a boy, so Jobs was instead adopted by Paul Reinhold and Clara (née Hagopian) Jobs. Paul Jobs, an American of German descent, was the son of a dairy farmer from Washington County, Wisconsin. After dropping out of high school, he worked as a mechanic, then joined the US Coast Guard. When his ship was decommissioned at San Francisco, he bet he could find a wife within 2 weeks. He then met Clara Hagopian, an American of Armenian descent, and the two were engaged ten days later, in March 1946, and married that same year. The couple moved to Wisconsin, then Indiana, where Paul Jobs worked as a machinist and later as a car salesman. Since Clara missed San Francisco, she convinced Paul to move back. There, Paul worked as a repossession agent, and Clara became a bookkeeper. In 1955, after having an ectopic pregnancy, the couple looked to adopt a child.[3] Since they lacked a college education, Schieble initially refused to sign the adoption papers, and went to court to request that her son be removed from the Jobs household and placed with a different family, but changed her mind after Paul and Clara promised to pay for their son's college tuition.[3][4]

Infancy

In his youth, Jobs's parents took him to a Lutheran church.[5] When Steve was in high school, Clara admitted to his girlfriend, Chrisann Brennan, that she "was too frightened to love [Steve] for the first six months of his life ... I was scared they were going to take him away from me. Even after we won the case, Steve was so difficult a child that by the time he was two I felt we had made a mistake. I wanted to return him." When Chrisann shared this comment with Steve, he stated that he was already aware,[6] and later said that he had been deeply loved and indulged by Paul and Clara. Many years later, Jobs's wife Laurene also noted that "he felt he had been really blessed by having the two of them as parents".[7] Jobs would "bristle" when Paul and Clara were referred to as his "adoptive parents", and he regarded them as his parents "1,000%". Jobs referred to his biological parents as "my sperm and egg bank. That's not harsh, it's just the way it was, a sperm bank thing, nothing more."[8]

1985: awarded (with Steve Wozniak) by US President Ronald Reagan, the country's highest honor for technological achievements[291]

National Medal of Technology

1987: [292]

Jefferson Award for Public Service

1989: Entrepreneur of the Decade by [293]

Inc.

1991: from Reed College[294]

Howard Vollum Award

2004–2010: listed among the on five separate occasions[295]

Time 100 Most Influential People in the World

2007: named the most powerful person in business by magazine[296]

Fortune

2007: inducted into the , located at The California Museum for History, Women and the Arts[297]

California Hall of Fame

2012: , an award for those who have influenced the music industry in areas unrelated to performance[298]

Grammy Trustees Award

2012: posthumously honored with an for his commitment to innovation throughout his career[299]

Edison Achievement Award

2013: posthumously inducted as a [300]

Disney Legend

2017: opens at Apple Park[301]

Steve Jobs Theater

2022: posthumously awarded the by US President Joe Biden, the country's highest civilian honor[302]

Presidential Medal of Freedom

Seva Foundation

Timeline of Steve Jobs media

(2011). Steve Jobs (1st ed.). New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-1-4516-4853-9.

Isaacson, Walter

Linzmayer, Owen W. (2004). . No Starch Press. ISBN 978-1-59327-010-0.

Apple Confidential 2.0: The Definitive History of the World's Most Colorful Company

Schlender, Brent; Tetzeli, Rick (2015). . Crown Business. ISBN 978-0-7710-7914-6.

Becoming Steve Jobs: The Evolution of a Reckless Upstart into a Visionary Leader

Smith, Alexander (2020). They Create Worlds: The Story of the People and Companies That Shaped the Video Game Industry, Volume 1: 1971–1982. Boca Raton, FL: . ISBN 978-1-138-38992-2.

CRC Press

official memorial page at Apple

Steve Jobs

discography at Discogs

Steve Jobs

at IMDb

Steve Jobs

profile at Forbes

Steve Jobs

The Vault at FBI Records

Steven Paul Jobs

at Andy Hertzfeld's The Original Macintosh (folklore.org)

Steve Jobs

at Steve Wozniak's woz.org

Steve Jobs

2011: "." Computer History Museum

Steve Jobs: From Garage to World's Most Valuable Company

2005: at Stanford University

Steve Jobs commencement speech

1995: , Founder, NeXT Computer, excerpts from an Oral History Interview at Smithsonian Institution, April 20, 1995

Steve Jobs

1994: in 1994: The Rolling Stone Interview in Rolling Stone

Steve Jobs

1990: Archived December 16, 2014, at the Wayback Machine – memory and imagination "What a computer is to me is it's the most remarkable tool that we've ever come up with, and it's the equivalent of a bicycle for our minds"

Steve Jobs

1983: ; Foreshadowing Wireless Networking, the iPad, and the App Store (audio clip)

The "Lost" Steve Jobs Speech from 1983